2011 LC buying experience

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Joined
Nov 13, 2010
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Location
South Florida
This forum was extremely useful to me in the course of my recent investigation of SUVs. In appreciation of the numerous helpful posts including those of previous buyers' buying experiences, here's mine. Hopefully, this information will be useful for others.

I was looking for a very high quality, capable, durable and discreet vehicle. A friend who has owned three (Lexus) LX470s spoke very highly of them, and I somehow found out that the LX470 was based on the LC and that the LC therefore also had to exist.

I test drove the Lexus LX570 but the "bling" put me off. I didn't care for the flashy wheels or the excessive chrome (e.g. around the tail lights) and in general felt the LC was a better-looking vehicle. I live in a prosperous area where fancy cars are a dime a dozen, but I often visit areas in which such vehicles never are seen. If the LC looks to most people like just another Toyota SUV - preferably a mid-market used one - then I would be very pleased.

Finding a Land Cruiser was difficult. The internet listed numerous dealers that supposedly had them, but when I called the dealers it quickly emerged that they did not have those vehicles. More surprisingly, many of the dealers' employees had no idea what a Land Cruiser was, and apparently had never seen (or noticed) one in their lives. When I finally reached somebody who was somewhat informed, they would tell me that no LC was available, and that the only way of getting one would be by making a special order, leaving a large deposit, and waiting 3 - 6 months. And paying full MSRP, of course.

The used market was not much better. Very few used LCs were available within a reasonable distance, and those usually disappeared from the market quite quickly. I did speak with one dealer who had recently sold an '08 which had languished on the lot for over a month because they originally asked for too much for a 3 y.o. vehicle ($58K), but they finally sold it for about $51K. I noted that an out-of-state Carmax (whose pricing is not negotiable) had a very nice 10K mile used 2010 available for $66K, but that disappeared from the web within a matter of days. (All of these vehicles had the upgrade package).

Then I got lucky. I checked e-Bay motors, and a dealer was auctioning off a brand new (2011) LC. Less than three days left on the auction. A buy-now price of around 76K (fully loaded). My preferred color/interior (white/sand beige). Even better, they were 30 miles up the road from me. To minimize the opportunities for shenanigans, I drove up there on Monday morning unannounced with a check, asked to see the LC (not there yet), and having established to my satisfaction that the vehicle actually existed and would arrive within a week, I agreed to pay them full price and left them a substantial deposit. The deal was finalized yesterday when the LC arrived; I have it now.

It will be interesting to see what the market for these vehicles will be like over the next year. Time will tell whether I turn out to be the one sucker who bought at MSRP when everyone else was getting $5K or $10K off, or whether MSRP and perhaps even above-MSRP pricing is an enduring market reality. It would have been very interesting to see how the auction would have ended up, but I didn't want to risk losing this vehicle and having to wait many months for another opportunity.

In any case, I plan to keep the LC for a long time, and it opens up rural and off-road opportunities which I haven't had since the last time I owned an SUV the early 1990's. I had a Nissan Pathfinder in 1991 - 1993, but have only owned cars since then.
 
Nice post man. Thanks for sharing.
 
Congrats on your new LC.
I also test drove both the LC200 and the LX570 back to back, and ended up ordering the LC in August. Got it in November, finally...

Would you mind checking something for me: while in park (with the engine running), pump the brakes 3 times. Do you hear the brake booster pump on the 3rd push?
 
Would you mind checking something for me: while in park (with the engine running), pump the brakes 3 times. Do you hear the brake booster pump on the 3rd push?

I tested this tonight and am not sure whether or not the 3rd time triggered the brake booster pump; it may have been the 2nd or 4th time. Took a while for me to be certain what the pump sounds like, it is very quiet and discreet. I doubt I would have noticed its existence if you hadn't pointed it out.

I can tell you that while in park, after having pumped the brakes a few times I did hear a very discreet sound for a second or two. If I continued pumping the brakes, there was no sound every other pump (of the brakes), and there was a sound on every other pump.

Is there a reason why you find this bothersome? Since these vehicles can find themselves pointing up- or downhill at 45 degree angles and it is absolutely imperative for the brakes to be fully effective at all times, I would not intuitively find it troublesome if the auxiliary pump were to be triggered at relatively low pressure drops, i.e. relatively frequently. Again, the sound of this pump in my LC is so discreet that I doubt many people would notice it unless they specifically were listening for it.
 
Thank you for checking.

I can hear it pretty loud, but I asked about it mainly due to the "new owner paranoia" syndrome: it makes you think you have something deffective when in fact everything is fine.
 
Thank you for checking.

I can hear it pretty loud, but I asked about it mainly due to the "new owner paranoia" syndrome: it makes you think you have something deffective when in fact everything is fine.

I went through the same thing for the first few days...every third press on the brake pedal had me freaked out. :)
 
The URJ200 resale values are really holding up. The (low) supply is keeping them RARE.
 
The URJ200 resale values are really holding up. The (low) supply is keeping them RARE.


...that's good news for us owners! Nothing like only loosing 10-15% on a vehicle that's almost 3 years old with 30K miles! It helps having paid under invoice :)
 
Gratz on the new ride.
For what it's worth, Toyota Canada has it as a business practice where you have to pay MSRP nationwide, levels the playing field I guess. Nothing would piss me off more to find out Joe Blow was able to haggle better than me, not that I am, or could, toss down 70plus k anyways :) And they haven't sold the LC in Canada for quite some time now anyways.
 
Gratz on the new ride.
For what it's worth, Toyota Canada has it as a business practice where you have to pay MSRP nationwide, levels the playing field I guess. Nothing would piss me off more to find out Joe Blow was able to haggle better than me, not that I am, or could, toss down 70plus k anyways :) And they haven't sold the LC in Canada for quite some time now anyways.


That's the worst idea in the world. No offense, but only liberals would think of that. Around here we call it price fixing, and it's illegal under the Sherman Antitrust Act.

Just because someone doesn't get the same deal as their next door neighbor is just life. It's called being a better business person and working out a better deal.

Let the free market work, dammit!
 
That's the worst idea in the world. No offense, but only liberals would think of that. Around here we call it price fixing, and it's illegal under the Sherman Antitrust Act.

Just because someone doesn't get the same deal as their next door neighbor is just life. It's called being a better business person and working out a better deal.

Let the free market work, dammit!

Well said..... :clap:
 
Gratz on the new ride.
For what it's worth, Toyota Canada has it as a business practice where you have to pay MSRP nationwide, levels the playing field I guess. Nothing would **** me off more to find out Joe Blow was able to haggle better than me, not that I am, or could, toss down 70plus k anyways :) And they haven't sold the LC in Canada for quite some time now anyways.

Reaks of Socialism. This can't be true?
 
That's the worst idea in the world. No offense, but only liberals would think of that. Around here we call it price fixing, and it's illegal under the Sherman Antitrust Act.

Just because someone doesn't get the same deal as their next door neighbor is just life. It's called being a better business person and working out a better deal.

Let the free market work, dammit!

What is the difference between Toyota prices being the same and McDonald prices being the same?
I suspect that if Toyota and Ford had the same pricing the Antitrust Act would apply but why wouldn't Toyota be able to price the vehicles it sells at whatever price point it wants?
 
What is the difference between Toyota prices being the same and McDonald prices being the same?
I suspect that if Toyota and Ford had the same pricing the Antitrust Act would apply but why wouldn't Toyota be able to price the vehicles it sells at whatever price point it wants?

Um...because toyota doesn't sell their own vehicles. Mcdonalds is also a franchise. Very different business entities.
 
if everyone wanted to negotiate their bigmac's price, it wouldn't be FAST food.

houses, cars, boats and other big ticket, low volume items are not in the same economic class as a burger.
 

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